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Authors: Grace Burrowes Mary Balogh

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She tore from his embrace and stomped off, deeper into the woods. “Don’t you see, Sedgemere, Papa will fail without me. He nearly failed when
Mama died, but she’d warned me I’d have to step in. He was about to invest in tulips—tulips, of all the cautionary tales!—and I
could not keep silent. Once he realized that I was as capable as Mama had been, he expected that I’d sort matters out.”

“And you’ve been sorting them ever since,” Sedgemere said, resisting the urge to haul her back into his arms. “You’ve done so
well that his business has grown
exponentially
, and now you dare not take your hand off the tiller for even a few weeks.”

She swung around to face him and crossed her arms, a feminine citadel of exasperation. “Not even for a few days. Papa takes odd notions and gets
ahead of himself, and while I would love to be your wife, Sedgemere, I cannot have the fate of royal dukes and presuming earls on my hands. Papa could ruin
them, especially now when they all trust him to produce such excellent returns. The Postlethwaites were courting ruin until two years ago. The Cheshires
cannot afford another Season for both daughters. You see my predicament.”

Sedgemere saw her brilliance, her frustration, her predicament, and her honor.

He also saw his future duchess. “My love, you have needed a partner. Your father was sensible enough to accept your help when it was offered. Will
you be as wise? All that’s wanted is a duke at your beck and call, a fellow somewhat wanting for charm, but well-endowed with consequence and devoted
to you.”

He took another step closer, for he had her attention. “I’ll simply tell your dear papa that he’s to dine with us once a week without
fail, and that he’s to hire the manager of your choosing, who will report to you. Hannibal will not sign a document without your permission, will not
commit to an investment unless you’ve discussed it with him. I will further bruit it about that the ducal finances, including your dower funds, will
be entrusted to his bank for safekeeping.”

As Sedgemere stalked closer, Anne unfolded her arms. “You’d have me manage my own fortune?”

“Mine too, if you have time. I’ll be too busy loving my wife and creating trouble in the Lords. Or keeping kites from disappearing into trees,
stewarding sheep races, dandling our babies on my knee. If you enjoy finances, it’s my duty to see that you may have as much diversion in that regard
as you please—and as little burden. A duke knows all about duty, my dear, but he needs the right duchess to teach him about happily ever afters and
true love.”

* * * * *

A duck quacked somewhere out on the lake, and a breeze presumed to tease at Sedgemere’s hair. His tone was very stern, but his eyes were no longer an
arctic wilderness to Anne. His eyes held promises, and challenges, and such a steady regard her heart warmed to behold him.

That he’d puzzled out her situation didn’t surprise her that much, though he’d found her out much more quickly than she’d
anticipated. She had not, however, expected that his reaction would be to… solve her dilemma. 

“I like money,” she said, lest he mistake the matter. “I like making money grow like that magical beanstalk, and grow with the slow
inexorability of the moonrise, grow every which way in between.” Grow like her feelings for Sedgemere. “I like interest calculations, and
formulas, and ledgers that balance to the penny. I can chase a missing penny for hours.”

Sedgemere stood very close. “I can make love with you for hours.”

Anne had enjoyed a taste of that, when she’d nearly torn his clothes from his body, and he’d met her frantic overtures with slow, steady,
relentless desire. Sedgemere’s self-control had taken her breath away, and driven her nearly to Bedlam at the thought of having to give him up.

She smoothed her fingers over the lock of his hair sent amiss by the wind. “I like money, I do not like being its slave, Sedgemere. You must keep
your hand in the finances, help me manage Papa, and ensure I have time to hunt for lucky clovers.”

She longed, not only to be rescued from her inherited burdens, but also to have all the happiness life as Sedgemere’s wife and mother of his children
could dream of. Wealth mattered not at all without somebody to share it.

Anne had learned that lesson four hundred thousand pounds ago. She had never learned how to beg, though. Sedgemere held her heart in his hands, and all she
could do was await his decision.

He gazed out over the lake, his expression inscrutable. “Will you search for those treasures in the locations of my choosing? The lucky clovers and
such? A few might be stashed in the places you’ve yet to thoroughly inspect.”

Relief and gratitude, sweet and profound, coursed through Anne. She need not be her papa’s abacus ever again—Sedgemere would intercede when she
felt overburdened—and she need never carry another burden in solitary misery either.

“You are all the treasure I will ever need, Elias. You and the boys, and Joseph too, of course.”

Sedgemere’s arms came around her, Anne leaned into him, and before they returned to the house, she did, indeed, find an entire bouquet of lucky
clovers in some very unlikely places.

Epilogue

“Anne looks different to me,” Hardcastle said as he and Sedgemere sat down to the obligatory rare beefsteak and undercooked potato featured in
London’s most exclusive gentlemen’s clubs. On a blustery late autumn day, the place at least had a roaring fire in its dining room. “She
seems… happier.”

Though how taking Sedgemere in hand could add to a woman’s happiness, Hardcastle did not know. Sedgemere seemed happier too. He swore less
frequently, reduced fewer presuming earls to quivering wrecks in the Lords, and no longer plagued Hardcastle night and day about finding a bride.

Tedious business, bride hunting, but Hardcastle’s own grandmama had taken up the cudgels, and seeing Sedgemere and his duchess billing and cooing
restored a man’s faith in miracles. Thank goodness, Hardcastle had a nephew in the nursery to prevent Grandmama from declaring outright war on his
bachelorhood. Finding the right duchess would require care and planning, nerves of steel, and a well-developed sense of martyrdom.

“Please pass the damned salt,” Sedgemere snapped. “Are you quite well, Hardcastle? I’m not in the habit of repeating my
requests.”

“Yes, you are,” Hardcastle replied, passing the salt cellar. “Until you get exactly what you want. When is the blessed event?”

The delicate silver spoon Sedgemere had been dredging through the salt paused. “Did Anne tell you?”

Well, damn. “You told me. Your step is lighter, you bring up the boys more often than you mention whatever scheme you’re hatching with Moreland
regarding the Corn Laws. You dragged me to a shop that sells kites last Tuesday. Marriage agrees with you. Ergo, a blessed event becomes likely.”

Sedgemere sprinkled salt just so over his beefsteak. The potatoes were hopeless, but Hardcastle passed the butter anyway.

“I should become a papa again in the spring,” Sedgemere said. “I’m shamelessly hoping for a daughter, and so are the boys.
Don’t think you’re safe though.”

Sedgemere
was safe at last. A man at risk of becoming a stodgy old duke had been rescued by a banker’s daughter and a few weeks of duck hunting, as it were.
Hardcastle congratulated himself on having played matchmaker with no one the wiser.

“I am a duke,” Hardcastle said, taking a sip of a red wine more hearty than delicate. “No one would dare harm my person. Ergo, I am safe.
Grandmama would kill the matchmakers for even trying to usurp her right to plague me herself on the matter of matrimony.”

“As would I, as would Anne, and the boys too. You are not safe, however, from the Duchess of Sedgemere’s latest ambition. Aren’t you
having anything to eat?”

Ambitious duchesses ought to be outlawed by royal decree. Hardcastle poured himself more wine.

“I’d rather hear about these ambitions you’ve allowed your wife to develop, for I sense they do not bode well for your oldest and dearest
friend.” Also, possibly Sedgemere’s loneliest friend, though a duke became inured to loneliness. 

“Anne has your happiness in mind,” Sedgemere said. “I’m mentioning her plans because you’re owed a warning. Once the baby
arrives, Anne will turn her attention to organizing a house party. She’s been in correspondence with Her Grace of Veramoor, and your days as a single
duke are numbered, my friend.”

 “This is the thanks I get for finding you a wife?” Hardcastle retorted. “For presiding at a duck orgy, and becoming godfather to no
less than five waddling little god-ducklings? Now your own duchess is plotting a house party, and my name is on the guest list? Sedgemere, you disappoint
me.”

Though the betrayal was sweet. Sedgemere’s duchess had him firmly in hand. Probably regularly in hand, too. Envy tried to crowd its way onto
Hardcastle’s dinner menu, but he fended it off by focusing on the threat immediately before him.

“When is this bacchanal to take place?” Hardcastle asked.

“You have plenty of time, not until summer, when all the best bacchanals take place. You might consider spending the summer in France.”

Not again. France, Ireland, Scotland… Weariness joined envy as additions to the meal’s offerings.

“Grandmama will never allow me to decline an invitation from Sedgemere House,” Hardcastle said. “I suppose we’ll have sheep races
at this gathering too?”

Sedgemere sat back, crossing his knife and fork over his mostly empty plate. Marriage must give the man an appetite, for Hardcastle had found the food
utterly ignorable.

“You’re just jealous,” Sedgemere said, which was true enough. “I’m the better sheep-race steward, and you know it. We
probably will have sheep races too, because the boys are insistent that Christopher come along with you to the house party.”

Christopher, the nephew who grew three inches every time Hardcastle visited the nursery.

“What do we have to do to get some trifle in this establishment?” Hardcastle muttered. “You’d have me drag an innocent child the
length of the realm so he might be inducted into the royal order of sheep jockeys. My upbringing was deprived, I see that now.”

His upbringing
had
been deprived, of course, so had Sedgemere’s. They’d been ducal heirs from too young an age, not allowed to be boys
much less rascals or sheep jockeys. Christopher deserved better, though hauling him from Kent up to Nottinghamshire would also mean…

“Hardcastle, that expression does not bode well for the king’s peace.”

“The poor king sired fifteen children,” Hardcastle replied, signaling the waiter. “He’ll never have peace again. If Christopher is
to attend this house party—assuming it ever takes place—his governess will have to travel north with us and join the assemblage for the
duration.”

“Ah, the trifle arrives,” Sedgemere said, as one waiter removed the dinner plates, and another set a frothy, fruity confection before each
duke. “Eat up, Hardcastle. For nothing you can say or do, promise or threaten, will tempt me to get your name off Anne’s guest list.”

“Don’t be needlessly puerile,” Hardcastle said, taking a spoonful of creamy, delectable heaven. “I know my duty. Eat your trifle,
Sedgemere. If Christopher and I are invited to this house party, to this house party we will go.”

Though they would not go without Christopher’s devoted governess, of that, Hardcastle was most certain.

 

THE END

 

To my dear Readers,

 

I hope you enjoyed Elias and Anne’s story, and appreciate that I did not name it Duck of My Dreams. (I was tempted, but Hardcastle would have none of
that.) His story is found in the anthology,
Dancing in the Duke’s Arms
, and is titled
May I Have This Duke
?

 

If you’re in the mood for more ducal disporting, I recently joined Emily Greenwood and Susanna Ives in publishing the Regency novella anthology,
Dukes in Disguise
. Three young, handsome dukes take to
the shires to dodge the matchmakers, and run straight into the arms of true love. Funny how that always seems to happen.

 

My next full length Regency romance—
Jack—The Jaded Gentlemen, Book IV
—comes out in June
2016. I’m looking very much forward to Jack’s tale, and have included an excerpt for you below.

 

If you’d like to be kept informed regarding all of my new releases, special offers, and events, you can
sign up for my newsletter
. I issue a newsletter several times a year, and will never sell or give away
your address. 

 

You can also find me on
Facebook
and
Twitter
, or
stop by the website
to browse the shelves and catch up
on the news. 

 

Read on for the opening scene from
Jack
—The Jaded Gentlemen, Book IV
!

 

Grace Burrowes

 

Jack—The Jaded Gentlemen, Book IV
Chapter One 

“My poor, wee Charles is all but done for,” Mortimer Cotton ranted. “This is the next thing to murder.”

All poor, wee, wooly, twelve-stone of Charles—a ram of indiscriminate breed—lay flat out in the December sunshine as if dead from a surfeit of
sexual exertions.

“Thievery has been committed under our very noses, Sir Jack,” Cotton went on, meaty fists propped on his hips. “That woman stole my tup,
bold as brass. Now look at him.”

Charles II, as the ram was styled, would recover from his erotic excesses by sundown, if he ran true to his owner’s boasts. Based on the contentment
radiating from Hattie Hennessey’s ewes, Charles had shared his legendary favors with the entire lot of them.

“Mark my words, Sir Jack: Slander is what we have here,” Hattie retorted. “Mr. Cotton accuses me of stealing yon lazy tup, when he ought
to be fined for not keeping his livestock properly contained. Now here the ram is, helping himself to my fodder, and to my poor yowes.”

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